WIRS #06 The Croston Curse
Posted: Sat Dec 17, 2022 1:18 pm
Chapter 01
My two cheese-burgers, large fries and sugar-free cola were very welcome, but I needed a long, long shower at the motel to get those whatsits' acrid stink out of my hair and nose. It was much too late for college work. I put my Chrome Book and both phones onto charge, nibbled my second cheese roll to crumbs, drank a cup of cold water. Despite the evening's excitement, I settled to sleep fairly quickly, dreamed harmlessly.
Saturday morning, while Ms. Jones nibbled a croissant, sipped coffee and wrangled her phone messages, I again enjoyed the luxury of piling my plate with grilled protein. I wasn't in the same league as Mike or Geoff, but set upon my breakfast with industry. As the heap, with its sides of hot toast and good coffee went down, I watched the cafe TV's 24 hr news-feed.
Beyond Brexit, more Brexit and yet more Brexit, the news cycle rolled around to a regional bulletin. Happily, no reports of 'Three-Eyed Flying Monkeys'. Sadly, a drunk, last seen staggering towards a canal tow-path behind Manchester Piccadilly, had been found face-down in the water by a dawn jogger. That made three such near there in a month. Also, in that area's club-land, one young man was dead and three badly injured after several brawls. They'd taken some of the very potent Meth pills currently 'on the street', tempers had flared.
"... in Salford are increasingly concerned for the safety of three nursing students who failed to return to their apartment after a friend's hen-night.... Sightings requested for a white or off-white Ford panel van, partial registration 'FGZ'..."
I peered at the trio's cheerful pictures, obviously lifted from social media. I shook my head. 'Hugh Baird' had lost its sad share to mishap and mayhem. Drunken stumble, landed wrong. Fall on ice, like-wise. Bad 'E' at a night-club. Another at a 'Rave'. Wrong time, wrong place when neighbour's jealous Ex went psycho with 'zombie knife'. 'Red-Runner' SUV driver, totally T-Boned by laden dumper truck, spun into folk waiting to cross...
Salford and the Greater Manchester area had lots of traffic cameras, so I was surprised the panel van had vanished. Perhaps its plates were obscured or damaged ? Easily done. Possibly innocent. And, perhaps the driver was using it on 'private business', did not want his employers to know where he'd taken it 'off piste'...
I shrugged. I was more concerned by how well I'd slept after last night's cull. Okay, the whatsits looked 'wrong', were not 'cute', certainly not 'cuddly', but I'd struck down my victims like so many summer flies. Yet, only a week ago, I'd said, 'A life is a life is a life...'
I knew just enough non-human biology to be very, very curious about those whatsits' innards. How did their skeleton support six limbs ? How did those articulate ? At least whatsits lacked 'primate volume' skulls, suggesting a fairly small brain. Against that, one of our neighbours had inherited a parrot, whose bright eyes certainly reflected its oft-mischievous intelligence. And, yes, out-witting 'The Minx' kept me sharp...
After breakfast, we headed West. Croston Village was a few miles North-East of Rufford and its famous Tudor 'Old Hall', beloved of my parents. Most kids on 'borrowed time' might have preferred Southport's garish fun-fair, but I was happy to spend hours studying and sketching the proportions and details of buildings, learning how such 'worked'. Although having a architect in the family would be so handy, Mum & Dad accepted my uncertain health made me unlikely to qualify. Also, given my parallel interests in electrics and electronics...
While Ms. Jones tackled the last of her messages, Mike followed the van's SatNav through a zig-zag of narrow roads, surely former farm lanes, often alongside fields with ponds and dank drainage channels. Much of this area had been soggy fen-land, with 'raised peat', lagoons and marsh. In fact, we weren't far from the renowned 'Martin Mere' aquatic bird sanctuary. Long term, given sea-level rise, this low-lying agricultural plain behind Southport and Formby would need full-on Dutch dykes, or go under like lost 'Doggerland'.
"Okay..." Ms. Jones finally scrolled to her notes, began our briefing. "Guys, today, we're investigating the bizarre 'Croston Curse' which has plagued the extended family of the late John Smith.
"Mr. Smith bequeathed a very valuable 'Avant Garde' medallion 'In Trust' to his ex-wives, ex-mistresses and their many daughters. Remarkably, each designated holder soon suffered from break-downs, severe depression, even suicide. Robust health before, prompt, oft-catastrophic decline after wearing it a few times. Despite hospitalisation, medication and counselling, relapses were common. Suspecting a contact toxin, they've cleaned the chain, tried sealing the medallion's back with lacquer. They've even tried exorcism...
"Now, you'd think they'd just sell the medallion or lock it in a safe-deposit box, but the trust terms preclude that. The designated holder must keep it on display, wear it to a specified number of formal social events each year and provide proof, else that branch of the family has their trust benefits suspended.
"I've seen the tax data, there's a lot of money involved. Also, the trust deed was crafted to prevent challenge. So, following several early, apparently unrelated tragedies, the extended family played 'Pass the Parcel'. After a grim succession of deaths and near-misses, it's more like 'Russian Roulette'.
"Even stranger, after handing the medallion on, surviving ex-holders generally recover, albeit slowly and warily.
"At first, this looked a simple, if Fortean case. However, routine background enquiries threw up many 'Non-Disclosure Agreements' and 'security' flags. Took almost a year before the MI Spooks allowed even limited access, via 'heavily redacted' documents. Sadly, another formerly healthy holder recently died following a sudden break-down. That finally persuaded those Spooks to admit their concerns. ..
"Given the circumstances, our 'Technical Section' had kept digging. Their briefing notes are usually terse, but this file just grew and grew...
"It all starts in the mid-1930s, when the Poles realised they were between a Fascist rock and a Communist hard place. Their code-breakers took on the challenge of the Germans' commercial, hence simpler 'Enigma' version, figured its weaknesses, built on that. When the hammer fell, they briefed the English and French, brought them up to speed. A small team fled to UK. Officially, they did 'Routine Translations', but were personal friends of Turing and his crew at Bletchley Park.
"Two of the young Polish mathematicians married. Um, I won't try to pronounce their names. Their clever daughter Elizabeth married Peter Smith, one of the early Manchester computing gurus.
"In the mid-1960s, Liz' and Pete's precocious son John rapidly earned a reputation for designing elegant but 'hardened' circuitry for industrial control and the military.
"Some of this found its way into Lucas Industries' proprietary 'Black Boxes' controlling Rolls-Royce Olympus jet engines, driving anything from warships to Concorde. Story goes that the Russians, who were struggling with the lower efficiency of their Tu-144 'Concordski' engines, stole one from a Lucas guy seconded to the Toulouse factory. After careful reverse engineering, they discovered it had been re-purposed to play 'Pong'...
"In the early 1970s, John got his hands on some of Intel's new 4004 'microprocessors'. He realised these could be used to simplify many of the control systems he'd designed, seriously shrinking their size, their count of logic chips. He cleverly mixed hardware and software, devised and licensed innovative interface circuitry to do a lot we now take for granted.
"There are many, many 'redacted' gaps in John Smith's extensive CV. Commercial NDA and MilSpec consultancies abound. He also did some 'deniable' work for the MI Spooks. Reading between those lines, cross-referencing where and what they could, our 'Technical Section' were very impressed by his work across several decades.
"Unfortunately, Mr. Smith's personal life was rather turbulent. He married and divorced three times, had a succession of mistresses and fathered many children, with an uncommon proportion being girls...
"Then, something went badly wrong. A redacted aerospace consultancy project collapsed, he became 'persona non grata'. Hero to zero. He retired to his family home in Croston, became a bit of a recluse. Turned against his extended family, especially the women and their daughters. Seems to have been a family grudge rather than general misogyny...
"Still played with electronics, though. Submitted a lot of off-beat articles and projects to electronics magazines and journals. Gradually, as the hobbyist market shrank, then shifted 'on-line', his increasingly retro designs fell out of fashion. Although there'd been stylistic similarities, his multiple pseudonyms were only confirmed when the estate executors discovered a big, big box of rejection slips..."
"Why us, Ma'm ?" Mike asked the logical question.
"First, a reasonable concern that John Smith may have independently discovered portals. Possibly encountered abhumans ? Perhaps got his hands on Alt-Tech ? He died more than a decade before our detection system came on-line, so the recent scatter of 'Yellow' hits in this area may be false-positives.
"Unless, of course, the 'Croston Curse' is a symptom of exposure to such ?
"Second, the subject those MI Spooks were so very, very reluctant to discuss directly...
"Towards the end of his career, John Smith apparently became obsessed by the wilder aspects of Tesla's work. Not the infamous 'Power Tower' project, but his 'Peace Ray' beam weapon, the 'Earthquake Machine' and other potential nasties. Modern consensus is they would not have worked, at least not as described. However, Tesla was paranoid about patent piracy. He often kept essential details in his head. Those scanty mid-1930s reports could be wary misdirection...
"To quote our contact, 'Smith had a scarily eclectic skill-set'. Given an increasingly cranky genius who'd worked on everything from industrial controllers to missile guidance, air-breathing lasers to fusion research, all bets are off."
My two cheese-burgers, large fries and sugar-free cola were very welcome, but I needed a long, long shower at the motel to get those whatsits' acrid stink out of my hair and nose. It was much too late for college work. I put my Chrome Book and both phones onto charge, nibbled my second cheese roll to crumbs, drank a cup of cold water. Despite the evening's excitement, I settled to sleep fairly quickly, dreamed harmlessly.
Saturday morning, while Ms. Jones nibbled a croissant, sipped coffee and wrangled her phone messages, I again enjoyed the luxury of piling my plate with grilled protein. I wasn't in the same league as Mike or Geoff, but set upon my breakfast with industry. As the heap, with its sides of hot toast and good coffee went down, I watched the cafe TV's 24 hr news-feed.
Beyond Brexit, more Brexit and yet more Brexit, the news cycle rolled around to a regional bulletin. Happily, no reports of 'Three-Eyed Flying Monkeys'. Sadly, a drunk, last seen staggering towards a canal tow-path behind Manchester Piccadilly, had been found face-down in the water by a dawn jogger. That made three such near there in a month. Also, in that area's club-land, one young man was dead and three badly injured after several brawls. They'd taken some of the very potent Meth pills currently 'on the street', tempers had flared.
"... in Salford are increasingly concerned for the safety of three nursing students who failed to return to their apartment after a friend's hen-night.... Sightings requested for a white or off-white Ford panel van, partial registration 'FGZ'..."
I peered at the trio's cheerful pictures, obviously lifted from social media. I shook my head. 'Hugh Baird' had lost its sad share to mishap and mayhem. Drunken stumble, landed wrong. Fall on ice, like-wise. Bad 'E' at a night-club. Another at a 'Rave'. Wrong time, wrong place when neighbour's jealous Ex went psycho with 'zombie knife'. 'Red-Runner' SUV driver, totally T-Boned by laden dumper truck, spun into folk waiting to cross...
Salford and the Greater Manchester area had lots of traffic cameras, so I was surprised the panel van had vanished. Perhaps its plates were obscured or damaged ? Easily done. Possibly innocent. And, perhaps the driver was using it on 'private business', did not want his employers to know where he'd taken it 'off piste'...
I shrugged. I was more concerned by how well I'd slept after last night's cull. Okay, the whatsits looked 'wrong', were not 'cute', certainly not 'cuddly', but I'd struck down my victims like so many summer flies. Yet, only a week ago, I'd said, 'A life is a life is a life...'
I knew just enough non-human biology to be very, very curious about those whatsits' innards. How did their skeleton support six limbs ? How did those articulate ? At least whatsits lacked 'primate volume' skulls, suggesting a fairly small brain. Against that, one of our neighbours had inherited a parrot, whose bright eyes certainly reflected its oft-mischievous intelligence. And, yes, out-witting 'The Minx' kept me sharp...
After breakfast, we headed West. Croston Village was a few miles North-East of Rufford and its famous Tudor 'Old Hall', beloved of my parents. Most kids on 'borrowed time' might have preferred Southport's garish fun-fair, but I was happy to spend hours studying and sketching the proportions and details of buildings, learning how such 'worked'. Although having a architect in the family would be so handy, Mum & Dad accepted my uncertain health made me unlikely to qualify. Also, given my parallel interests in electrics and electronics...
While Ms. Jones tackled the last of her messages, Mike followed the van's SatNav through a zig-zag of narrow roads, surely former farm lanes, often alongside fields with ponds and dank drainage channels. Much of this area had been soggy fen-land, with 'raised peat', lagoons and marsh. In fact, we weren't far from the renowned 'Martin Mere' aquatic bird sanctuary. Long term, given sea-level rise, this low-lying agricultural plain behind Southport and Formby would need full-on Dutch dykes, or go under like lost 'Doggerland'.
"Okay..." Ms. Jones finally scrolled to her notes, began our briefing. "Guys, today, we're investigating the bizarre 'Croston Curse' which has plagued the extended family of the late John Smith.
"Mr. Smith bequeathed a very valuable 'Avant Garde' medallion 'In Trust' to his ex-wives, ex-mistresses and their many daughters. Remarkably, each designated holder soon suffered from break-downs, severe depression, even suicide. Robust health before, prompt, oft-catastrophic decline after wearing it a few times. Despite hospitalisation, medication and counselling, relapses were common. Suspecting a contact toxin, they've cleaned the chain, tried sealing the medallion's back with lacquer. They've even tried exorcism...
"Now, you'd think they'd just sell the medallion or lock it in a safe-deposit box, but the trust terms preclude that. The designated holder must keep it on display, wear it to a specified number of formal social events each year and provide proof, else that branch of the family has their trust benefits suspended.
"I've seen the tax data, there's a lot of money involved. Also, the trust deed was crafted to prevent challenge. So, following several early, apparently unrelated tragedies, the extended family played 'Pass the Parcel'. After a grim succession of deaths and near-misses, it's more like 'Russian Roulette'.
"Even stranger, after handing the medallion on, surviving ex-holders generally recover, albeit slowly and warily.
"At first, this looked a simple, if Fortean case. However, routine background enquiries threw up many 'Non-Disclosure Agreements' and 'security' flags. Took almost a year before the MI Spooks allowed even limited access, via 'heavily redacted' documents. Sadly, another formerly healthy holder recently died following a sudden break-down. That finally persuaded those Spooks to admit their concerns. ..
"Given the circumstances, our 'Technical Section' had kept digging. Their briefing notes are usually terse, but this file just grew and grew...
"It all starts in the mid-1930s, when the Poles realised they were between a Fascist rock and a Communist hard place. Their code-breakers took on the challenge of the Germans' commercial, hence simpler 'Enigma' version, figured its weaknesses, built on that. When the hammer fell, they briefed the English and French, brought them up to speed. A small team fled to UK. Officially, they did 'Routine Translations', but were personal friends of Turing and his crew at Bletchley Park.
"Two of the young Polish mathematicians married. Um, I won't try to pronounce their names. Their clever daughter Elizabeth married Peter Smith, one of the early Manchester computing gurus.
"In the mid-1960s, Liz' and Pete's precocious son John rapidly earned a reputation for designing elegant but 'hardened' circuitry for industrial control and the military.
"Some of this found its way into Lucas Industries' proprietary 'Black Boxes' controlling Rolls-Royce Olympus jet engines, driving anything from warships to Concorde. Story goes that the Russians, who were struggling with the lower efficiency of their Tu-144 'Concordski' engines, stole one from a Lucas guy seconded to the Toulouse factory. After careful reverse engineering, they discovered it had been re-purposed to play 'Pong'...
"In the early 1970s, John got his hands on some of Intel's new 4004 'microprocessors'. He realised these could be used to simplify many of the control systems he'd designed, seriously shrinking their size, their count of logic chips. He cleverly mixed hardware and software, devised and licensed innovative interface circuitry to do a lot we now take for granted.
"There are many, many 'redacted' gaps in John Smith's extensive CV. Commercial NDA and MilSpec consultancies abound. He also did some 'deniable' work for the MI Spooks. Reading between those lines, cross-referencing where and what they could, our 'Technical Section' were very impressed by his work across several decades.
"Unfortunately, Mr. Smith's personal life was rather turbulent. He married and divorced three times, had a succession of mistresses and fathered many children, with an uncommon proportion being girls...
"Then, something went badly wrong. A redacted aerospace consultancy project collapsed, he became 'persona non grata'. Hero to zero. He retired to his family home in Croston, became a bit of a recluse. Turned against his extended family, especially the women and their daughters. Seems to have been a family grudge rather than general misogyny...
"Still played with electronics, though. Submitted a lot of off-beat articles and projects to electronics magazines and journals. Gradually, as the hobbyist market shrank, then shifted 'on-line', his increasingly retro designs fell out of fashion. Although there'd been stylistic similarities, his multiple pseudonyms were only confirmed when the estate executors discovered a big, big box of rejection slips..."
"Why us, Ma'm ?" Mike asked the logical question.
"First, a reasonable concern that John Smith may have independently discovered portals. Possibly encountered abhumans ? Perhaps got his hands on Alt-Tech ? He died more than a decade before our detection system came on-line, so the recent scatter of 'Yellow' hits in this area may be false-positives.
"Unless, of course, the 'Croston Curse' is a symptom of exposure to such ?
"Second, the subject those MI Spooks were so very, very reluctant to discuss directly...
"Towards the end of his career, John Smith apparently became obsessed by the wilder aspects of Tesla's work. Not the infamous 'Power Tower' project, but his 'Peace Ray' beam weapon, the 'Earthquake Machine' and other potential nasties. Modern consensus is they would not have worked, at least not as described. However, Tesla was paranoid about patent piracy. He often kept essential details in his head. Those scanty mid-1930s reports could be wary misdirection...
"To quote our contact, 'Smith had a scarily eclectic skill-set'. Given an increasingly cranky genius who'd worked on everything from industrial controllers to missile guidance, air-breathing lasers to fusion research, all bets are off."